Scott Bryan had less than $65 to his name the night police said he was beaten to death by a 19-year-old man outside of a gas station in Kalispell, Montana. 

Bryan, 60, had lived on-and-off the streets since 2021, in the community of 28,000 residents about 200 miles southeast of Helena. But friends were getting worried about Bryan – he was trying to make $65 last for weeks while dealing with health problems and the increasingly hostile attitude some in the community had started to take toward him and others struggling to survive.

On June 25, around 2 a.m., police said Kaleb Fleck, 19, and an 18-year-old friend were sitting inside a pickup truck when Bryan approached them. Moments later, Bryan was lying on the ground with severe facial trauma, including exposed bone and a nasal cavity that appeared crushed, according to police. Fleck was arrested and charged with killing Bryan.

It may be a more violent version of the encounter that played out on a New York City subway nearly two months earlier, where U.S. Marine veteran Daniel Penny choked Jordan Neely, killing him. That case drew national attention, including acclaim for Penny from right-wing pundits, but experts say both Nelly and Bryan’s cases point to the violence homeless Americans regularly encounter.  

“This everyday violence is, in part, spurred by false narratives that stoke fear and frame people who are homeless as aggressors,” said Margot Kushel, a researcher on homelessness at the University of California San Francisco. “We must reject those narratives and recognize that, instead, they are our friends, family, and neighbors who have been left behind by the housing shortage, lack of funding for rental assistance for low-income renters, and the ongoing effects of structural racism,” 

Bryan’s ‘biggest strength and biggest weakness was his kindness’

Bryan’s journey to the streets of northwest Montana began like it does for many Americans, with a health crisis and financial hardship. 

The Connecticut native was diagnosed with epilepsy and was a lung cancer survivor in his 20s, said Bryan’s sister, Holly Torska, and he lived for a while with his parents while holding down part-time jobs.